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AP French: Pour contraster Flashcards

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7388823715maisbut0
7388826710cependanthowever1
7388829471par contreon the other hand2
7388835008bien que, quoique [+subjunctive]although3
7388846107pendant quewhile (time)4
7388848520commewhile (non time)5
7388851031tandis quewhile (contrast)6
7388855784d'un côté...d'un autre côtéon one side, on the other7
7388862435pourtant, toutefois, néanmoinsnevertheless8
7388868734quand mêmeall the same9
7388871498en revanchein return, on the other hand10
7388875101au contraireon the contrary11
7388878010par rapport àin relation to12
7388880982pas du toutnot at all13
7388885682pour ainsi direso to speak14
7388888522certainementassuredly15
7388891622c'est ainsi queconsequently16
7388901262dans le fondbasically, in effect17
7388904873donctherefore, hence18
7388908795dû à quelquechosedue to something19
7388918775en brefin short20
7388921460en conséquenceaccordingly21
7388924163en d'autres termesin other words22
7388926734en effetindeed23
7388929456en fin de compteultimately24
7388933250en résuméin summary25
7388938030en toutoverall26
7388950702évidemmentobviously27
7388953630globalementall in all28
7388956566malgré toutin spite of everything29
7388965091nul doute queno doubt that30
7388967790pour conclureto conclude31
7388972298pour toutes ces raisonsfor all these/those reasons32
7388976469sans aucun doutedefinitely33
7388979226vraimenttruly34

AP Biology Chapter 43 Flashcards

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6427186879Immune SystemThe totality of the body's physical barriers, immune cells, molecules, and physiological responses that enable you to block, fight, and destroy pathogens0
6427186880Innate ImmunityAll animals A defense that is active immediately upon infection and is the same whether or not the pathogen has been encountered before Nonspecific (less advanced, generic) Outer covering (skin/shell, chemical secretions, internal surfaces) Small preset group of receptor proteins bind to molecules/structures that are absent from animal bodies but common to viruses, bacteria, or other microbes Rapid Response1
6427186881Innate Immunity - Internal DefensesPhagocytic cells, Natural Killer cells, Antimicrobial Proteins, Inflammatory Reponse, Complement Protein Cascade Can have B and T cells2
6427186882Adaptive ImmunityVertebrates Only A defense that produces a a vast arsenal of receptors, each of which recognizes a feature typically found only on a particular part of a particular molecule in a particular pathogen Specific Slow development, slow response3
6427186883Adaptive Immunity - Internal DefensesAntibodies Cytotoxic cells (B and T Cells)4
6427186884Innate immunity of InvertebratesExoskeleton - First line Lysozyme - Breaks down bacterial cell walls Hemocytes - Phagocytosis or production of chemicals Antimicrobial Peptide secretion (disrupt plasma membranes)5
6427186885LysozymeAn enzyme that breaks down cell walls to protect insect digestive systems6
6427186886PhagocytosisThe cellular ingestion and digestion of bacteria and other foreign susbtances7
6427186887Innate Immunity of CertebratesCoexist with adaptive immunity Barrier defenses, phagocytosis, antimicrobial peptides (found in both vertebrates and invertebrates) Unique aspects to vertebrates (natural killer cells, interferons, inflammatory response)8
6427186888Barrier DefensesBlock entry of many pathogens Skin Mucous membrane Mucous Ciliated cells Saliva, tears, mucous (inhibits colonization, hostile lysozymes) pH from stomach Oil and sweat (pH 3-5) prevent growth9
6427186889Cellular Innate Defenses...10
6427186890Toll-Like Receptor (TLR)A mammalian receptor that binds to fragments of molecules characteristic of a set of pathogens After detection, a phagocytic cell engulfs them (traps in a vacuole) Lysosome fuses and degrades components)11
6427186891NeutrophilsOne main type of phagocytic cell in the mammalian body Attracted by signals from infected tissues Engulf and destroy infecting pathogens12
6427186892MacrophagesSecond main type of phagocytic cell in the mammalian body Larger than neutrophils Migratory or localized13
6427186893Dendritic CellsPopulate tissues (ex. skin) that ocntact the environment) Stimulate adaptive immunity against pathogens they encounter and engulf14
6427186894EosinophilsFound beneath mucosal surface Low phagocytic activity Important in defending against multicellular invaders (parasitic worms) Discharge destructive enzymes15
6427186895Natural Killer CellsUnique to vertebrates Circulate body to detect abnormal array of surface proteins (virus-infected or cancerous cells)16
6427186896InterferonsAntimicrobial proteins that provide innate defenses by interfering with viral infection Infected cells secrete interferons, which induce nearby uninfected cells to produce substances and inhibit viral reproduction Some white blood cells secrete interferons to activate macrophages17
6427186897Complement System (Protein Cascade)30 proteins that circulate blood plasma Inactive until activated by substances on the surface of many microbes Activation results in a cascade of biochemical reactions, lysis of invading cells Inflammation18
6427186898Inflammatory ResponseChanges brought about by signaling molecules released upon injury or infection that causes swelling (increased blood flow)19
6427186899HistamineInflammatory signaling molecule Released at sites of damage, dilates blood vessels, permeates blood vessels20
6427186900Mast CellsFound in connective tissue Stores histamine in granules (vesicles)21
6427186901CytokinesSignaling molecules that enhance immune response by promoting blood flow to the site of infection/injury Produced by macrophages and neutrophils22
6427186902InflammationCycles of signaling and response Activated complement proteins promote histamine release, attracting more phagocytic cells to enter infected tissues Enhanced blood flow delivers more antimicrobial peptides Pus accumulates (rich in white blood cells, dead pathogens, cell debris) Fever, meningitis, appendicitis, septic shock23
6427186903Evasion of Innate Immunity by pathogensOuter capsule interferes with molecular recognition Resist breakdown by lysosomes Hides from innate defenses24
6427186904LymphocytesWhite blood cells T and B cells25
6427186905ThymusAn organ in the thoracic cavity above the heart Lymphocytes mature into T Cells26
6427186906B CellsLymphocytes that mature from bone marrow27
64271869073rd Lymphocyte typeNatural Killer Remain in blood28
6427186908AntigenAny substance that elicits a response from a B Cell or T Cell29
6427186909Antigen ReceptorA protein that binds to an antigen30
6427186910EpitoteAn antigenic determinant The small, accessible portion of an antigen that binds to an antigen receptor Determines T/B cell specificity31
6427186911B-Cell Antigen ReceptorEach B cell antigen is Y-Shaped (four polypeptide chains - two identical heavy chains, two identical light chains, with disulfide bridges) Transmembrane region near one end of a heavy chain anchors the receptor in the cell's plasma membrane) Short tail region at the end of the heavy chain extends into cytoplasma Variable regions bind to antigens (constant regions make up the rest) Bind to intact epitotes of intact antigens circulating in body fluids32
6427186912Variable RegionsAmino Acid sequence varies extensively from one B cell to another Specific binding33
6427186913Antibody/Immunoglobulin (Ig)A protein secreted when an antigen receptor binds to an antigen Y-Shaped organization May bind to antigens on surface of pathogens or free in body fluids34
6427186914T Cell Antigen ReceptorTwo different polypeptide chains (Alpha and Beta chain) linked by a disulfide bridge Transmembrane region anchors the receptor to plasma membrane Outer tip - Variable region Only bind to fragments of antigens displayed on the surface of host cells35
6427186915MHC (Major Histocompatibility Complex) MoleculeA host protein that displays the antigen gragment on the cell surface36
6427186916Antigen PresentationThe display of the antigen fragment in an exposed groove of the MHC protein Pathogen or part of a pathogen is taken in by a host cell Enzymes cleave the antigen into smaller peptides (antigen fragments) MHC binds to fragments MHC moves to surface and presents antigen37
6427186917B Cell and T Cell developmentDiversit, self tolerance (lack of reactivity to self), cell proliferation, stronger secondary response38
6427186918Generation of B and T Cell DiversityEach person makes more than 1 mil diff. B Cell antigen receptors and 10 mil. different T Cell antigen receptors Recombinase enzyme linkas a light chain V gene seg. to one J (joining) seg. to form a single exon Rnadomly links any one of 40 V to any one of 5 J39
6427186919Origin of Self ToleranceLymphocyte antigen receptors are tested for self-reactivity Those that are self reactive undergo apoptosis or rendered nonfunctional40
6427186920Proliferation of B and T Cells; Clonal SelectionBinding of antigen receptor to epitote activates lymphocyte B/T cell then undergoes multiple cell divisions to produce clones41
6427186921Effector CellsShort lived cells that take effect immediately against the antigen or any pathogen producing that sntigen42
6427186922Memory CellsLong-lived cells that can give rise to effector cells if the same antigen is encountered later in the animal's life43
6427186923Primary Immune ResponsePeaks 10-17 days after initial exposure Selected B and T cells give rise to effector and memory forms44
6427186924Secondary Immune ResponseHallmark of adaptive immunity Peaks 2-7 days after exposure Faster, stronger, longer response Relies on reservoir of memory T and B cells generated following the initial exposure45
6427186925Humoral Immune ResponseOccurs in blood/lymph Antibodies help neutralize or eliminate toxins and pathogens in blood/lymph46
6427186926Cell-Mediated immune responseSpecialized T cells destroy infected host cells47
6427186927Helper T-CellTriggers both humoral and cell-mediated immune response Do not carry out the responses themselves Signals the production of antibodies To activate adaptive immune responses, a foreign molecule must be present that can bind specifically to the antigen receptor of the T Cell AND the antigen must be displayed on the surface of an antigen-presenting cell48
6427186928Antigen-Presenting CellA dendritic cell, macrophage, or B Cell49
6427186929What distinguishes an antigen-presenting cell?Antigen-Presenting Cells can also be host cells Class I MHC - Body Cells Class I and Class II MHC - Antigen presenting cells Class II allows antigen presenting cells to be recognized50
6427186930Helper T/Antigen-Presenting Cell InteractionAntigen receptors on Helper T surface bind to specific epitote of an antigen frag. Accessory protein on helper T Cell attaches to Class II MHC (keeps them joined) Signals from cytokines are exchanges (antigen-presenting cell secrete cytokines to stimulate Helpter T, causing the Helpter T to produce cytokines) Helper T Cell proliferates (forms Activated Helpter T Cells) to stimulate cytotoxic T Cells B Cells present antigents to already activated helper T cells, which activates B Cells themselves51
6427186931Cytotoxic T CellsCell-mediated immune response effector cells Requires signaling molecules from helper T and the interaction with a antigen-presenting cell to activate Frag. of foreign proteins produced in infected host cells associate with Class I MHC (recognized by cytotoxic T) Secrete proteins that disrupt membrane integrity and tirgger apoptosis Deprives pathogen of reproduction host and exposes them to antibodies52
6427186932Activation of B CellsActivation by antigen is aided by cytokine (secreted by helper T) Stimulated by antigen and cytokines, B Cells proliferate into memory and effector/plasma cells (secrete antibodies)53
6427186933Antigen processing and display in B CellsPresents only the antigen to which it specifically binds (magrophages/dendritic cells present fragments from a wide variety of protein antigens) Antigen binds to receptor on B Cell surface Receptor-mediated endocytosis, class II MHC protein then presents antigen frag to helpter T54
6427186934B Cell ActivationCell-to-cell contact between B cell and Helper T Cell 1000's of plasma cells produced (these stop expressing a membrane bound antigen receptor) and produce/secrete antibodies (2000/sec for 4-5 days) Antigens recognized by B cells contain multiple epitotes (single antigen, variety of B cells activated)55
6427186935Antibody FunctionBinds to entigens, marks pathogens for inactivation/destruction56
6427186936Antibody Function - NeutralizationAntibodies bind to viral surface proteins Prevent infection of host cell, or recruits natural killer Bind to toxins released in body and prevent entrance57
6427186937Antibody Function - OpsonizationAntibodies bound to antigens on bacteria present a readily recognized structure for macrophages or neutrophils Increase phagocytosis May link bacterial cells, virus particles, or other foreign substances into aggregates (each antibody has 2 binding sites) Positive feedback (antibodies increase phagocytosis, phagocytic cells present antigens, more B cells formed, more antibodies released)58
6427186938Antibody Function - Membrane Attack ComplexComplement protein binds to antigen-antibody complex on a foreign cell (or enveloped virus) Complement system activates next protein Activated complement protein cascade generates membrane attack complex (forms pores in membrane of foreign cells, ions/water rush in, lysis)59
6427186939Active ImmunityDefenses that arise when a pathogen infects the body and prompts a primary or secondary immune response60
6427186940Passive ImmunityAntibodies provided by mother guard against pathogens that have never infected the newborn61
6427186941Immunization/VaccinationIntroduction of antigens into the body used to induce adaptive immunity Antibodies from an immune animal are injected into nonimmune animal (artificial passive immunization)62
6427186942Monoclonial AntibodiesAntibodies prepared from a single blone of B cells grown in a culture63
6427186943Immune RejectionAntigen receptors are not self-tolerant of a recipient's body cells (Immune system is health)64
6427186944Blood GroupsType A - A Carbohydrate, Anti-B Type B - B Carbohydrate, Anti-A Type AB - Both A and B carbohydrate, no antibody Type O - Neither, Anti-A and Anti-B65
6427186945Tissue and Organ TransplantsMHC stimulate immune response Diversity of MHC66
6427186946AllergiesExaggerated (hypersentive) responses to certain antigens (allergens)67
6427186947Autoimmune DiseaseImmune system is active against particular molecules of the body Immune system is self-reactive Lupus - Antibodies vs histones and DNA (breakdown of body cells - skin rashes, fevers, arthritis, kidney dysfunction) Rheumatoid Arthritis - Damage and inflammation of joints/cartilage Type I Diabetes Mellitus - Insulin producing Beta cells of pancreas are destroyed by cytotoxic T Cells Multiple sclerosis - T cells infiltrate central nervous system and destroy myelin sheath68
6427186948ImmunodeficiencyAn immune system response to antigens that is defective or absent69
6427186949Aquired Immunodeficiency SyndromeHIV virus70
6427186950Antigenic VariationChanges in epitote expression Lessens recognition by immune system71
6427186951LatencyViruses enter an inactive state No proteins made, no free virus particles, adaptive immunity is not triggered72
6427186952HIVInfects helper T Cells, high mutation (antigenic variation)73
6427186953CancerCancer frequency increases dramatically when adaptive immunity is inactivated74

AP Psychology Unit 9B Flashcards

Advanced Placement Psychology
Enterprise High School, Redding, CA\
All terms from Myers Psychology for AP (BFW Worth, 2011)

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5959186161Emotiona response of the whole organism, involving (1) physiological arousal, (2) expressive behaviors, and (3) conscious experience.0
5959186162James-Lange Theorythe theory that our experience of emotion is our awareness of our physiological responses to emotion-arousing stimuli.1
5959186163Cannon-Bard Theorythe theory that an emotion-arousing stimulus simultaneously triggers (1) physiological responses and (2) the subjective experience of emotion.2
5959186164Two-Factor Theorythe Schachter-Singer theory that to experience emotion one must (1) be physically aroused and (2) cognitively label the arousal.3
5959186165Polygrapha machine, commonly used in attempts to detect lies, that measures several of the physiological responses accompanying emotion (such as perspiration and cardiovascular and breathing changes).4
5959186166Facial Feedbackthe effect of facial expressions on experienced emotions, as when a facial expression of anger or happiness intensifies feelings of anger or happiness.5
5959186174Stressthe process by which we perceive and respond to certain events, called stressors, that we appraise as threatening or challenging.6
5959186175General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS)Selye's concept of the body's adaptive response to stress in three phases—alarm, resistance, exhaustion.7
5959186176Coronary Heart Diseasethe clogging of the vessels that nourish the heart muscle; the leading cause of death in North America.8
5959186177Type AFriedman and Rosenman's term for competitive, hard-driving, impatient, verbally aggressive, and anger-prone people.9
5959186178Type BFriedman and Rosenman's term for easygoing, relaxed people.10
5959186179Psychophysiological Illnessliterally, "mind-body" illness; any stress-related physical illness, such as hypertension and some headaches.11
5959186180Psychoneuroimmunology (PNI)the study of how psychological, neural, and endocrine processes together affect the immune system and resulting health.12
5959186181Lymphocytesthe two types of white blood cells that are part of the body's immune system: B lymphocytes form in the bone marrow and release antibodies that fight bacterial infections; The T lymphocytes form in the thymus and other lymphatic tissue and attack cancer cells, viruses, and foreign substances.13

AP Environmental Science - Biomes Flashcards

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9517672373Temperate Deciduous Forest-Cool Winters, Warm Summers (Seasonal Variation) -Precipitation is relatively evenly spread throughout the year -Deciduous Trees (Oak, Beech) -Europe, China, Eastern North America -Northern Hemisphere -Good Soils0
9517672374Temperate Grassland-Cool Winters, Warm Summers (seasonal variation is more extreme than temperate deciduous forests) -Limited amount of precipitation -Frequent fires (no trees) -Also called prairie or steppe -Northern Hemisphere -North America, Middle East, Europe, Asia -Very fertile soils (used for agriculture)1
9517672375Temperate Rainforest-Cool Winters, Warm Summers (Seasonal Variation) -Large amount of precipitation (Less rain in winters) -Coniferous Trees -Provide lumber and paper -Northern Hemisphere -East coast of North America and Canada -Fertile soils that are susceptible to land slides and erosion if forests are cleared2
9517672376Tropical Rainforest-Warm all year round -Very high amount of precipitation (300-500 mm per month) -Southern Hemisphere -Central America, Africa, South America, Southeast Asia -Great Biodiversity -Poor, thin soils3
9517672377Tropical Dry Forest/Tropical Deciduous Forest-Warm all year round -Extreme wet and dry seasons -Wet summer (October to April) and dry winter (May, June, July, August, September) -Southern Hemisphere -India, Africa, South America, northern Australia -Erosion-prone soils4
9517672378Savanna (Tropical Grasslands)-Slight seasonal variation (warmer in summer) -Extreme wet and dry seasons -Wet Summer (not as wet as tropical dry forest) -Southern Hemisphere -Isolated Trees -Africa, South America, India, Australia -Zebras, Giraffes, Gazelles5
9517672379Desert-Driest Biome -Barely an rainfall -Slight seasonal variation -Saline soils -Little Vegetation -Temperatures drop at night -Northern Hemisphere -Africa, Mexico, Middle East, Asia6
9517672380Tundra-Coldest Biome -Warmer in summers, but still cold (5 degrees celsius) -Freezing in winters (-20 degrees celsius) -Northern Hemisphere -Dry -Slightly wet summers -Soil is permanently frozen (permafrost) -Also occurs as alpine tundra at the tops of mountains -Northern Europe, Northern Canada, Northern Asia, Greenland7
9517672381Boreal Forest/Taiga/Coniferous Forest-Largest Biome -Northern Hemisphere -Coniferous Trees (Pinecones) -Cold. Cooler in summers (never above 20 degrees Celsius) -Moderate Precipitation -More wet in summer than winter -Poor soils -Moose, Wolves, Lynx, Bears -Northern Europe, Canada, Northern Asia8
9517672382Chaparral-Densely thicketed -Highly seasonal -Cool, wet winters and warm, dry summers -Induced by oceanic influences -Northern Hemisphere -California, Chile, Australia -Frequent fires9
9517672383Polar grasslandAnother name for the tundra10
9517672384DeerAnimal common in the temperate deciduous forest11

AP Biology: Animal Behavior Flashcards

Animal Behavior

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7857533077BehaviorAn action carried out by muscles by way of the nervous system in response to stimuli0
7857533079Fixed Action PatternUnlearned acts caused by simple stimuli that are unchangeable and can't be interrupted. (Ex. Three spined sticklebacks act aggressively toward things w/ red coloring because they look like males)1
7857533080Sign StimulusThe trigger of a fixed action pattern2
7857533081MigrationRegular long distance change in location due to environmental cues3
7857533084SignalStimulus sent between animals, usually as a form of communication4
7857533086Stimulus-Response ChainA stimulus causes another stimulus which causes a behavior, usually associated with visual communication5
7857533087PheremonesChemical substances used to communicate through odors and tastes, usually in mammals and insects to stimulate mating behaviors or to sound an alarm6
7857533088Innate BehaviorBehavior shared by multiple individuals by nature7
7857533090LearningModification of behavior through experience8
7857533091ImprintingLong lasting behavioral response to an individual objects at a stage of life9
7857533092Sensitive PeriodCritical amount of time early in an organisms life where they are most receptive to learning behaviors and imprinting.10
7857533093Imprinting StimulusOutside stimulus that directs young's behavior (Ex. young geese tend to follow the first thing that moves away from them)11
7857533096Associative LearningAssociating experiences, good or bad, with satisfaction or a lack thereof12
7857533097Classical ConditioningForm of associative learning that involves a repeated action (Ex. Pavlov's dogs)13
7857533098Operant ConditioningAssociative learning through trial and error in which organisms associate behavior with a reward or a punishment and then repeats or avoids the action14
7857533100Problem SolvingCreating an approach to deal with obstacles15
7857533101Social LearningLearning through observation, especially of elders or through imitation of authority figures16
7857533102ForagingFood obtaining behaviors including eating, collecting, searching, and recognizing17
7857533104PromiscuityNo strong bond between mates18
7857533105Monogamy1 male with 1 female, tends to be long lasting19
7857533113Intersexual SelectionOne organism chooses to mate with another organism because of their characteristics (between different sexes)20
7857533114Intrasexual SelectionMate competition between members of the same sex21
7857533116Agnostic BehaviorContest when winner gains food or a mate, etc determined by strength + size, often when males compete with each other for a female22
7857533118AltruismSelflessness which decreases individual fitness but increases the fitness of another individual23
7857533121Kin SelectionNatural selection that favors altruistic behavior through increased reproductive success of relatives (i.e. save your sister but not your cousin)24

AP Environmental Science: Many Ways To Go APES! Flashcards

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96011365421.ConservationAllowing the use of resources in a responsible manner0
9601136543Preservation 2.Setting aside areas and protecting them from human activities1
9601136544Keystone species 3.Species whose role in an ecosystem are more important than others (e.g. sea otters, sea stars, grizzly bears, prairie dogs)2
9601136545Indicator species 4.Species that serve as early warnings that an ecosystem is being damaged (e.g. trout)3
9601136546Characteristics of endangered species 5.Small range, large territory, or live on an island4
9601136547Endangered species 6.A group of organisms in danger of becoming extinct if the situation is not improved5
9601136548Invasive/Alien/Exotic species 7.Non-native species to an area; often thrive and disrupt the ecosystem balance6
9601136549Parts of the hydrologic cycle 8.1) Evaporation, Transpiration 2) Condensation 3) Precipitation 4) Runoff, Infiltration7
9601136550Nitrogen fixing 9.Because atmospheric N2 cannot be used directly by plants it must first be converted into ammonia (NH3) by bacteria (rhizobium or cyanobacteria)8
9601136551Ammonification 10.Nitrogen is converted into ammonia by ammonifying bacteria; may occur when nitrogen in organic wastes in the soil are converted to ammonia or when atmospheric nitrogen (N2) is converted to NH39
9601136552Nitrification 11.Ammonia (NH3) is converted to nitrate ions (NO3)-10
9601136553Assimilation 12.Inorganic N2 is converted into organic molecules such as DNA/amino acids & proteins - plants assimilate nitrogen as NH4+ or NO3- through their roots; animals (herbivores) assimilate organic nitrogen compounds by eating plants.11
9601136554Denitrification 13.Bacteria convert nitrate (NO3)- and nitrite (NO2)- back into N2 gas; bacteria convert ammonia (NH3) back into N2 or N2O; typically accomplished by anaerobic bacteria12
9601136555Phosphorus does not circulate as easily as nitrogen because... 14.It does not exist as a gas, but is released by weathering of phosphate (PO4)3- rocks; this is a sedimentary cycle, never found as a gas13
9601136556How is excess phosphorus added to aquatic ecosystems? 15.Runoff of animal wastes, fertilizer, discharge of sewage. Limiting factor in freshwater ecosystems; excess P leads to eutrophication14
9601136557Photosynthesis 16.Plants convert atmospheric carbon (CO2) into complex carbohydrates (glucose). Energy is consumed and oxygen is released as a waste product15
9601136558Aerobic respiration 17.O2-consuming producers, consumers & decomposers16
9601136559Anaerobic respiration 18.Break down of carbohydrates without oxygen - products are methane, alcohols, and other organics.17
9601136560Transpiration 19.Process where water is absorbed by plant roots, moves up through plants, passes through pores (stomata) in leaves or other parts, evaporates into atmosphere as water vapor.18
9601136561Largest reservoirs of Carbon? 20.Carbonate rocks first, oceans second.19
9601136562Sustainability 21.The ability to meet the current needs of humanity without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs.20
9601136563Tragedy of the Commons 22.(1968 paper by ecologist Garret Hardin) "Freedom to breed" is bringing ruin to all. Global commons such as atmosphere & oceans are used by all and owned by none. When no individual has ownership, no one takes responsibility. Examples: overfishing in the oceans, over pumping of the Ogallala Aquifer21
9601136564Natural selection 23.Organisms that possess favorable adaptations survive and pass them onto the next generation.22
9601136565Energy flow in food webs or chains, through trophic systems 24.only 10% of the usable energy is transferred because usable energy lost as heat (second law); not all biomass is digested and absorbed; predators expend energy to catch prey; the 10% value is an average value23
9601136566Biotic and abiotic 25.living and nonliving components of an ecosystem24
9601136567Competition 26.a type of population interaction, usually over a limited resource - may be intraspecific or interspecific25
9601136568Producer/Autotroph 27.photosynthetic or chemosynthetic life; Chemotroph - organism undergoing chemosynthesis - usually carried out by sulfur bacteria in aphotic zones in the ocean (deep ocean vents, etc.)26
9601136569Primary succession 28.development of communities in a lifeless area not previously inhabited by life or those in which the soil profile is totally destroyed (lava flows); no soil substrate present; begins with lichen action27
9601136570Secondary succession 29.Life progresses where soil remains (clear-cut forest, fire, disturbed areas)28
9601136571Mutualism 30.Symbiotic relationship where both partners benefit and both participate29
9601136572Commensalism 31.Symbiotic relationship where one partner benefits & other is unaffected or may benefit30
9601136573Parasitism 32.relationship in which one partner obtains nutrients at the expense of the host31
9601136574Biome 33.Large distinct terrestrial region having similar climate, soil, plants & animals; terrestrial biomes determining factors are temperature and precipitation.32
9601136575Carrying capacity 34.the number of individuals (size of the population) that can be sustained in an area (supported by available resources in the environment).33
9601136576R strategist 35.reproduce early in life; many small unprotected offspring; tend to be generalists, short lifespan34
9601136577K strategist 36.reproduce late in life; few offspring; care for offspring; tend to be specialists, longer lifespan35
9601136578Positive feedback 37.when a change in some condition triggers a response that intensifies the changing condition (warmer Earth - snow melts - less sunlight is reflected & more is absorbed, therefore warmer Earth)36
9601136579Negative feedback 38.when a changing in some condition triggers a response that counteracts the changed condition (warmer Earth - more ocean evaporation - more stratus clouds - less sunlight reaches the ground - therefore cooler Earth)37
9601136580Malthus 39.said human population increases exponentially, while food supplies increase arithmetically; factors that keep the population in check include war, famine & disease38
9601136581Doubling time 40.rule of 70; 70 divided by the percent growth rate39
9601136582Replacement level fertility 41.the number of children a couple must have to replace themselves (2.1 developed, 2.7 developing); biotic potential; total fertility rate40
9601136583World Population U.S. Population 42.WP: about 6.8 billion USP: about 310 million41
9601136584Preindustrial stage 43.(demographic transition) birth & death rates high, population grows slowly, infant mortality high42
9601136585Transitional stage 44.(demographic transition) death rate lower, better health care, population grows fast43
9601136586Industrial stage 45.(demographic transition) decline in birth rate, population growth slows44
9601136587Postindustrial stage 46.(demographic transition) low birth & death rates45
9601136588Age structure diagrams 47.broad base = rapid growth; narrow base = negative growth; uniform shape = zero growth; Major Age Cohorts pre-reproductives, reproductives, post-reproductives46
9601136589First and second most populated countries 48.1) China 2) India47
9601136590Most important thing affecting population growth 49.Low status of women48
9601136591Ways to decrease birth rate 50.Family planning, contraception, economic rewards and penalties49
9601136592True cost / External costsHarmful environmental side effects that are not reflected in a product's price50
9601136593CogenerationUsing waste heat to make electricity51
9601136594Electricity generated by fossil fuels, biomass, or nuclear powerheat is produced which creates steam steam turns a turbine the mechanical energy from the turbine is converted to electrical energy in a generator and that energy is transmitted to homes through power lines52
9601136595Hydroelectric powerpotential energy of stored water is used to turn a turbine the mechanical energy from the turbine is converted to electrical energy in a generator and that energy is transmitted to homes through power lines53
9601136596Thermal gradientspontaneous flow of heat from warmer to cooler bodies54
9601136597Ionizing radiationenough energy to dislodge electrons from atoms, forming ions; capable of causing cancer (gamma, Xrays, UV)55
9601136598High quality energyorganized & concentrated; can perform useful work (fossil fuel & nuclear)56
9601136599Low quality energydisorganized, dispersed (heat in ocean or air wind, solar)57
9601136600First law of Thermodynamicsenergy is neither created nor destroyed, but may be converted from one form to another (Law of Conservation of Energy)58
9601136601Second law of Thermodynamicswhen energy is changed from one form to another, some useful energy is always degraded into lower quality energy, usually heat59
9601136602Best solutions to energy shortageconservation, increase efficiency, explore alternative energy options60
9601136603Alternate energy sourceswind, solar, waves, biomass, geothermal, fuel cells61
9601136604Natural radioactive decayunstable radioisotopes decay releasing gamma rays, alpha particles, and beta particles62
9601136605Half-lifethe time it takes for 1/2 the mass of a radioisotope to decay63
9601136606Estimate of how long a radioactive isotope must be stored until it decays to a safe levelapproximately 10 half-lives64
9601136607Nuclear Fissionnuclei of isotopes split apart when struck by neutrons65
9601136608Nuclear Fusiontwo isotopes of light elements (H) forced together at high temperatures till they fuse to form a heavier nucleus (He). Process is expensive; break-even point not reached yet; D + D He or D + T He66
9601136609Mass deficitnot all matter is converted into matter in a fusion reaction - some (the mass deficit) is converted into energy. E = mc2 . Explains the energy released in a fusion reaction.67
9601136610Major parts of a nuclear reactorcore, control rods, steam generator, turbine, containment building68
9601136611Most serious nuclear accidentsChernobyl, Ukraine (1986) and Three Mile Island, PA (1979)69
9601136612Petroleum formationmicroscopic aquatic organisms in sediments converted by heat and pressure into a mixture of hydrocarbons (animal remains)70
9601136613Pros of petroleumrelatively cheap, easily transported, high-quality energy71
9601136614Cons of petroleumReserves will be depleted soon; pollution during drilling, transport, and refining; burning makes CO272
9601136615Steps in coal formationpear, lignite, bituminous, anthracite73
9601136616Major insecticide groups (and examples)chlorinated hydrocarbons (DDT); organophosphates (malathion); carbamates (aldicarb)74
9601136617Pesticide prossaves lives from insect-transmitted disease, increases food supply, increases profits for farmers75
9601136618Pesticide consgenetic resistance, ecosystem imbalance, pesticide treadmill, persistence, bioaccumulation, biological magnification76
9601136619Natural pest controlbetter agricultural practices, genetically resistant plants, natural enemies, biopesticides, sex attractants77
9601136620In natural ecosystems, methods which control 50 - 90% of pestspredators, diseases, and parasites78
9601136621Particulate matterSource: burning fossil fuels and diesel exhaust Effect: reduces visibility & respiratory irritation Reduction: filtering, electrostatic precipitators, alternative energy)79
9601136622Nitrogen OxidesSource: ~50% from transportation (exhaust), ~50% from industry Effects: acidification of lakes, respiratory irritation, leads to photochemical smog & ozone formation Equation for acid formation: NO + O2 NO2 + H2O HNO3 Reduction: selective catalytic reduction unit, more efficient combustion processes like FBC (fluidized bed combustion), lower combustion temperatures, find alternatives to fossil fuels80
9601136623Sulfur OxidesSource: coal burning Effects: acid deposition, respiratory irritation, damages plants Equation for acid formation: SO2 + O2 = SO3 + H2O = H2SO4 Reduction: scrubbers, burn low sulfur fuel)81
9601136624Carbon OxidesSource: auto exhaust, incomplete combustion Effects: CO binds to hemoglobin, reducing blood's ability to carry O2; CO2 contributes to global warming Reduction: catalytic converter, emissions testing, oxygenated fuel, mass transit, increase efficiencies, find alternatives to fossil fuels82
9601136625OzoneFormation: secondary pollutant, NO2 + uv = NO + O* O* + O2 = O3, with VOCs (volatile organic compounds) Effects: respiratory irritant, plant damage Reduction: reduce NO and VOC emissions Tropospheric ozone is BAD, stratospheric ozone is GOOD83
9601136626Radonnaturally occurring colorless, odorless, radioactive gas, found in some types of soil and rock, can seep into homes and buildings, formed from the decay of uranium (U), causes cancer and is a problem in the Reading Prong area of PA. Radon decays to Polonium (Po), which is a solid. Po particles sit in lung tissue and are alpha (α) emitters. This leads to lung cancer.84
9601136627Photochemical smogformed by chemical reactions involving sunlight (NO, VOC, O*); associated with automobile traffic85
9601136628Acid depositioncaused by sulfuric and nitric acids (H2SO4, HNO3), resulting in lowered pH of surface waters, soil acidification and destruction of building materials86
9601136629Greenhouse gasesExamples: H2O, CO2, O3, chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), methane (CH4). Effect: they trap outgoing infrared (IR, heat) energy, causing Earth to warm87
9601136630Effects of global warmingrising sea level (thermal expansion), extreme weather, drought, famine, extinctions88
9601136631Stratospheric ozone depletioncaused by ozone-depleting chemicals (ODCs) such as CFCs, methyl chloroform or trichloromethane (CHCl3), carbon tetrachloride (CCl4), halon (haloalkanes), methyl bromide (CH3Br)— all of which attack stratospheric ozone. The Cl or Br atoms "attack" the ozone molecules and cause the thinning of this layer. Global Agreement to decrease ODC - Montreal Protocol (1987)89
9601136632Effects of ozone depletionincreased UV light that results in skin cancer, cataracts, decreased plant growth (inhibits photosynthesis, decline in Antarctic and Arctic phytoplankton population), impaired immune systems90
9601136633Primary air pollutantsproduced by humans & nature (CO,CO2,SOx,NOx, hydrocarbons, particulates)91
9601136634Secondary air pollutantsproduced as a result of reactions that primary air pollutants undergo (include photochemical pollutants O3, PAN and NO2, and acids such as H2SO4 and HNO3)92
9601136635Sources of merucryburning coal (25% of atmospheric deposition), compact fluorescent bulbs93
9601136636Major source of sulfurcoal-burning power plants94
9601136637Point vs. non-point sourcesPoint; from a specific location, such as a pipe. Non-point: from over an area such as runoff95
9601136638Chlorinegood= disinfection of water; bad = forms trihalomethanes when organics are present in the water; many systems now use chloramines to treat waste water before it is discharged. Alternatives to chlorine disinfection - ozone96
9601136639Fecal coliform/Enterococcus bacteriaindicator of sewage contamination ; found in the intestines of all warm blooded mammals (coliform bacteria)97
9601136640BODbiological oxygen demand, amount of dissolved oxygen needed by aerobic decomposers to break down organic materials in water98
9601136641Eutrophicationmay result in rapid algal growth caused by an excess of nitrates and phosphates in water99
9601136642Hypoxiawhen aquatic plants die, the BOD rises as aerobic decomposers break down the plants, the DO (dissolved O2) drops & the water cannot support life; very low DO levels; dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico100
9601136643Anoxicno DO (dissolved O2) in the water101
9601136644Surface miningcheaper and can remove more minerals; less hazardous to workers102
9601136645Orea rock that contains a large enough concentration of a mineral making it profitable to mine103
9601136646HumusOrganic, dark material remaining after decomposition by microorganisms104
9601136647LeachingRemoval of dissolved materials from soils by water moving downwards105
9601136648IlluviationDeposit of leached material in lower soil layers (B horizon)106
9601136649LoamPerfect agricultural soil with optimal portions of sand, silt, clay (40%, 40%, 20%)107
9601136650Soil profile, horizons in orderO - A - E - B - C -R108
9601136651Organic fertilizerslow-acting & long-lasting because the organic remains need time to be decomposed109
9601136652Salinization of soilin arid regions, water evaporates leaving salts behind110
9601136653Volcano and Earthquake occurenceat plate boundaries (divergent= spreading, mid-ocean ridges) (convergent= trenches) (transform= sliding, San Andreas)111
9601136654Monoculturecultivation of a single crop, usually in a large area112
9601136655Foodwheat, rice and corn provide more than ½ of the calories in the food consumed by the world's people113
9601136656LD50The amount of a chemical that kills 50% of the animals in a test population withing 14 days of the initial dose114
9601136657Threshold doseThe maximum dose that has no measurable effect on a given population115
9601136658Percent water on earth by type97.5% seawater 2.5% freshwater116
9601136659AquiferAny water bearing layer in the ground; confined or artesian, unconfined or water table117
9601136660SubsidenceLand sinks as result of over pumping an aquifer118
9601136661Cone of depressionlowering of the water table around a pumping well119
9601136662Salt water introsionnear the coast, over-pumping of groundwater causes saltwater to move into the aquifer120
9601136663Ways to conserve waterAgriculture = drip/trickle irrigation Industry = recycling Home = use gray water, repair leaks, low flow fixtures, reclaimed water for agriculture and gold courses121
9601136664Hazardous Waste (as defined by RCRA) - Mutagen, Teratogen, Carcinogen(In order) Causes hereditary changes through mutations, fetus deformities, cancer122
9601136665Minamata Bay disease(1932 - 1968, Japan) Physical and mental impairments caused by methylmercury poisoning123
9601136666Love Canal, NY(1950s +) Chemicals buried in old canal; schools and homes built over it; caused birth defects and cancer124
9601136667Main component of municipal solid waste (MSW)Paper, most is landfilled125
9601136668Sanitary landfill problems and solutionsproblem = leachate; solution = liner with collection system problem = methane gas; solution = collect gas and burn problem = volume of garbage; solution = compact and reduce126
9601136669Incineration advantagesVolume of waster reduced by 90%, and waste heat can be used127
9601136670Incineration disadvantagesToxic emmisions 9polyvinyl chloride, dioxins), scrubbers and electrostatic precipitators needed, ash disposal (contains heavy metals)128
9601136671Best way to solve waste problemReduce the amounts of waste at the source (source reduction129
9601136672ENSOEl Niño Southern Oscillation, see-sawing of air pressure over the S. Pacific130
9601136673During an El Nino yeartrade winds weaken n& warm water sloshed back to SA131
9601136674During a non El Nino yeareasterly trade winds and ocean currents pool warm water in the western Pacific, allowing upwelling of nutrient rich water off the west coast of South America132
9601136675Effects of El Ninoupwelling decreases disrupting food chains; N U.S. has mild winters, SW U.S. has increased rainfall, less Atlantic hurricanes133
9601136676Temperature Inversionlayer of dense, cool air trapped under a layer of warm dense air, pollution in trapped layer may build to harmful levels; frequent in Los Angeles, California and Mexico City, Mexico134
9601136677Forest FiresTypes - Surface, Crown, Ground (in order) usually burn only under growth and leaf litter on forest floor; hot fires, may start on ground but eventually leap from treetop to treetop; go underground, may smolder for days or weeks, difficult to detect and extinguish, i.e. peat bogs.135
9601136678Surface Mining Control & Reclamation Act (1977)requires coal strip mines to reclaim the land136
9601136679Madrid Protocol(1991) Moratorium on mineral exploration for 50 years in Antarctica137
9601136680Safe Drinking Water Act (SWDA, 1974)set maximum contaminant levels for pollutants in drinking water that may have adverse effects on human health138
9601136681Clean Water Act (CWA, 1974)set maximum permissible amounts of water pollutants that can be discharged into waterways; aims to make surface waters swimmable and fishable139
9601136682Ocean Dumping Ban Act(1988) bans ocean dumping of sewage sludge and industrial waste in the ocean140
9601136683Clean Air Act (1970)Set emission standards for cars and limits for release of air pollutants141
9601136684Kyoto Protocol (2005)Controlling global warming by setting greenhouse gas emissions targets for developed countries142
9601136685Montreal Protocol (1987)Phase out of ozone depleting substances143
9601136686Resource Conservation & Recovery Act (RCRA) (1976)Controls hazardous waste with a cradle-to-grave system144
9601136687Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, & Liability Act (CERCLA) (1980)"Superfund" designed to identify and clean up abandoned hazardous waste dump sites145
9601136688Nuclear Waste Policy Act (1982)U.S. government must develop a high level nuclear waste site (Yucca Mountain)146
9601136689Food Quality Protection Act (1996)Set pesticide limits in food, and all active and inactive ingredients must be screened for estrogen/endocrine effects.147
9601136690Endangered Species Act (1973)Identifies threatened and endangered species in the U.S. and puts their protection ahead of economic considerations148
9601136691Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (1973)Lists species that cannot be commercially traded as live specimens or wildlife products149
9601136692Magnuson-Stevens Act (1976)Management of marine fisheries150
9601136693Healthy Forest Initiative (2003)thin overstocked stands, clear away vegetation and trees to create shaded fuel breaks, provide funding and guidance to reduce or eliminate hazardous fuels in national forests, improve forest fire fighting, and research new methods to halt destructive insects151
9601136694National Environmental Policy Act (1969)Environmental Impact Statements must be done before any project affecting federal lands can be started152
9601136695Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants (2004)Seeks to protect human health from the 12 most toxic chemicals (includes 8 chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides / DDT can be used for malaria control)153

AP Vocabulary List 2 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5636172623admonishto speak in a way that expresses disapproval or criticism; scold0
5636172624akimbowith the hands on the hips and the elbows turned outward; spread apart in a bent position1
5636172625lassitudethe condition of being tired; lack of physical or mental energy2
5636173813licentioussexually immoral or offensive3
5636173814musen-a woman who is the source of inspiration; v-to think about something carefully or thoroughly4
5636173815pecuniaryrelating to or in the form of money5
5636175107plightto put or give in pledge6
5636175108presumptuoustoo confident in a way that's rude7
5636175109subversivea systematic attempt to overthrow or undermine8
5636176609vacuoushaving or showing a lack of intelligence or serious thought9

AP Psychology Unit 2 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
7561456634Tripartite TheoryId/Pleasure Principle Ego/ Reality Principle Superego/Morality Principle0
7561457628IdBasic needs and desires1
7561458682EgoBalances Id/ superego impulses2
7561458683SuperegoOrigin of morals. Strives for perfection3
7561461724RepressionOne's ego prevents one's desires from the id occurring, due to conditions like our environment. Then our mind "bottles" them up and never thinks about them again4
7561462659RegressionOne reverts back to a similar behavior as they once did as a child5
7561464559RationalizationOne creates excuses for their own actions to avoid the true cause6
7561468120DenialTo reject the idea that one committed an action or thought to prevent feelings of guilt and distress7
7561468550Reaction FormationWhen one's desires conflict with one's ego, their action may be opposite of the desire8
7561469626DisplacementOne represses fear, affection, and impulses for someone, and then release onto someone else9
7561471252ProjectionWhen one has desires that cause stress, they will project these ideas onto someone else to avoid dealing with the stress themself.10
7561471927SublimationOne transfers negative energy into positive energy to help anxiety11
7561473829Oral(Birth - 18 months) focus on biting and sucking12
7561475076Anal(18 months - 3 yrs) Focusing on expelling and retaining feces Anal Retentive - OCD Anal Expulsive - Slob13
7561488856Phallic(3 yrs - 6 yrs) Obsession with genitals Oedipal Complex - Boy desires mother and emulates father Castration Anxiety - Fear father will castrate Electra complex - Girl have "penis envy" and fascinated by father14
7561498375Latency (6 yrs - Puberty)Extreme repression of sexual urges (dormancy)15
7561500030Genital (Puberty ->)Reinstatement of sexuality, focus on genitals and heterosexual relationships16
7561502755Electra ComplexGirls have "penis envy" and fascinated by Father. "Daddy's Little Girl"17
7561502756Penis EnvySupposed envy of the male's possession of a penis, postulated by Freud to account for some aspects of female behavior18
7561503417Free AssociationFirst thing comes to mind - true beliefs19
7561505197Freudian SlipSlips of the tongue - reveals what the Id wants20
7561506772Oedipal ComplexBoy desires mother and emulates Father21
7561508145FixationsAn obsessive interest in or feeling about someone or something.22
7561509434Carl Jung-Collective Unconscious- the hypothesized part of the unconscious mind that is inherited from previous generations and that contains universally shared ancestral experiences and ideas -Archetypes- the inherited mental images of universal human instincts, themes, and preoccupations that are the main components of the collective unconscious23
7561511193Alfred AdlerStriving For Superiority- Describes actions of people who are motivated by highly developed social interest. Inferiority Complex- Feelings of lack of worth Compensation-psychological defense mechanism in which a person makes up for inferiorities in one area by becoming superior in another area24
7561511628Karen HorneyBasic Anxiety- An emotion that gives a sense of uncertainty and loneliness, in a hostile would can lead to maladjustment Womb Envy- male equivalent of penis envy, males are jealous of females ability to create and sustain life25
7561513421Sigmund Freud-Effects of conscious and unconscious on personality -Tripartite Theory -5 Psychosexual stages -Freudian Methods26
7561516871Freudian Methods-Freudian slips -Free association -Dream analysis -Projective Test27
7690001269Erik EriksonStages of Psychosocial Development28
7690018908Stages of Psychosocial DevelopmentContrasts to Freud's Idea of Psychosexual development: We are always developing We develop through social stages of our life: Trust vs Mistrust Autonomy vs Shame & Doubt Initiative vs Guilt Industry vs Inferiority Identity vs Role Confusion Intimacy vs Isolation Generatively vs Stagnation Ego-integrity vs Dispair29
7690071507BehaviorismWe learn behavior Tabula Rasa - Blank Slate Behavior is observable30
7690077849Ivan PavlovBehaviorist Experiment - Pavlov's Dogs Proved - Classical Conditioning31
7690084594John B. WatsonBehaviorist Experiment - Baby Albert Proved - Classical Conditioning32
7690101177B. F. SkinnerBehaviorist Experiment - Trained rat to do what he wanted through punishment/reward (Skinner's Box) Proved - Operant Conditioning33
7690120907Edward ThorndikeLaw of Effect: Behavior shaped by punishments and rewards34
7690127546Tabula Rasa"Blank Slate" in latin We are neither good or bad John Locke35
7690158633Observable behaviorBehavior that can be observed36
7690164663Associated learningLearning to associate two things together Pavlov's Dog - Bell and Food37
7690175088Reinforcement vs PunishmentBehavior can be controlled through rewards or punishments38
7690198595Classical ConditioningInvoluntary Behavior - Associated Learning, Pavlov's Dogs39
7690206189Operant ConditioningStrengthens or weakens voluntary behavior through punishment/reward40
7690218034HumanismHumans are good Needs not being met = bad Strive for self-actualization We are all unique41
7690225729Abraham MaslowHierarchy of Needs42
7690234501Hierarchy of NeedsSelf-Actualization Esteem Needs Belonging Needs Safety Needs Physiological Needs43
7690242387Carl RogersReject conditions of self-worth: they are imposed by others Unconditional positive regard44
7690294671CognitiveThinking shapes behavior Emphasis on processing and categorizing info45
7690305611Jean PiagetCognitive Stages of Cognitive Development46
7690328215Julian RotterCognitive Locus of Control Internal = Healthy, you are in charge External = Thinks happen to you, Learned Helplessness47
7690341973George KellyCognitive Schema Behavior is a result of social constructs48
7690352356SchemaMental construct we use to organize the world49
7690378475Albert BanduraSocial Learning Theory Experiment - Bobo Doll Experiment Proved - We learn through others50
7690391586Trait TheoryCompares individuals' personalities by degree51
7690396074Trait Theory CriticismsDoes not account for situational factors Personality changes until mid-adulthood52
7690402774Gordon AllportFounded the Trait Theory53
7690415962Hans EysenkTrait Theory Introversion vs Extroversion Stable vs Unstable54
7690419511Raymond CatellTrait Theory 16 Personality Factor Test - First personality test55
7690429447"Big Five" OceanO - Openness (creativity) C - Conscientiousness (orderly, rule abiding) E - Extroversion (outgoingness) A - Agreeableness (Selflessness) N - Neuroticism (Instability)56
7690455556MulticulturalIndividualistic vs Collective societies US, UK vs China, Samoa57
7690472979Myers-BriggsPersonality Test with Dichotomies Extroversion-Introversion Sensing-Intuiting Thinking-Feeling Judging-Perceiving58
7690535910PsychobiologicalBehavior is caused by biological factors59
7690539271Chemical ImbalancesChemical imbalances affect behavior60
7690546547William SheldonPsychobiologist Developed Somatotype Theory61
7690553945Somatotype TheoryCorrelation with physique and personality62
7690561556EndomorphShort, Fat, Big-Boned Lethargic, Goofy, Jolly,63
7690572387MesomorphMuscular, Healthy, Proportional Confident, courageous, risk-taker64
7690583670EctomorphTall, Thin, No muscle-tone Introverted, reserved, inhibited65

APES Fianl Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
9792232461ionizing radiationcancer causing, UV, X-ray, Gamma0
9792235693heatwhat does infared translate to1
9792239202frequencywhat decreases in the greenhouse effect trapping the waves2
9792245420entropythe second law of thermodynamics3
979225639110how many half lives before deemed safe4
9792259457positive feedback loopCauses a system to change further in the same direction.5
9792285004negative feedback loopcorrective to maintain homeostasis6
9792287856synergythe power that results from the combination of two or more forces7
9792293414p O A e B C Rsoil layers8
9792297960p layerwetland/peat9
9792297961eluviationmineral buildup as water cant progress from A to B10
9792306156claysmall with low infiltration11
9792309149sandlarge with high infiltration12
9792314220leaching infiltration------- is minerals while ------ is water13
9792321828habitat, decreases evaporation and erosionwhy is the leaf litter important14
9792325291right diagonal upclay silt sand15
9792336510sedimentaryweathering and erosion16
9792336511igneouslava, mashed together rocks17
9792343765metamorphicheat and pressure18
9792353531Fixation/ammonification nirtification assimilation denitrificationnitrogen cycle19
9792368041erosion time and no gaseous phasewhy is phosphorus a limiting factor20
9792374487ocean forest soilcarbon sink order21
9792377520H2Schemosnythetic bacteria uses what compound22
9792380734law of toleranceFor each (a)biotic factor, an organism has a set range of tolerances within which it can survive23
9792384015lava glaciers moving concreteprimary succession examples24
9792394255fire and natural disasterssecondary succession examples25
9792402880tissue, dead/dying, enzymes break downdifference between detritivores, scavengers and decomposes26
9792411465tundrapermafrost27
9792416063grasslandgood soil and agriculture//savanah28
9792419665tiagaboreal forest, Russia, coniferous forest29
9792421833chaparealshrubs and fire30
9792424662decidious forestbroad lead31
9792427146rainforesthigh NPP and biodiversity32
9792430109desertdesertification biome33
9792432468mangroveroots and babies34
9792436231coral reefhigh biodiversity ad calcium carbonate=ocean acidification35
9792439491swamps/marsheslakes and filtration36
9792442509estuaries60% of population with high transportation and primary productivity37
9792442510kelp foresthigh DO38
9792445653r stragetisttype 339
9792453368k stragetisttype 140
9792459834bottomtype three is the ---- curve41
9792465633APEX or eats something necessarywhat makes a species keystone42
9792471832air qual water qual migrationindicator species: lichen amphibians birds43
9792473979HIPPO H more than othersmain cause of biodiversity loss44
9792483787clumpedmost popular spacial distribution45
9792489949thermoclineA narrow stratum of rapid temperature change in the ocean and in many temperate-zone lakes46
9792494163intertidal photic benthic abyssalocean zones47
9792498066littoral limnetic profundal benthiclake zones48
9792501059cypress treesswamps have what type of trees that aid in filtration49
9792510197paul erhlichpopultion bomb50
9792513370malthusfirst proponent of notion that humans would exceed earth's carrying capacity51
97926408472.1 2.6RLF for developed and developing52
9792653344pre-industrialhigh birth rate high death rate 0% growth53
9792655663transitionalhigh birth low death BIG +54
9792659968industriallow birth low death small +55
9792664237post-industriallow birth low death 0% growth56
9792678434middle fatter than endswhat is a negative growth histogrm57
9792687204agriculture no education/preventativereasons for high TFR58
9792700183foliage roots and flowers strengthNPK meaning59
9792723556polyculturebackyard garden60
9792723557polyvarietialapple orchard61
9792726254intercroppingone row corn one row beans62
9792729145rop rotationone year corn one year beans63
9792731746fallowempty field tht is bad for erosion64
9792741529increased pestacides and fertalizersdisadvantages of monoculture65
9792746712undernutritionlow calorie66
9792750991malnutritionlow nutrition67
9792750993eyesVit A affects68
9792753862goiterIodine affects69
9792756801anemiaFe affects70
9792760340marasmuswaste away// aneorexia71
9792763738kwahiorkorswollen belly, less than 3 yrs weaning72
9792773430lagoons, GHG, low----- from CAFOs leak E.Coli, CH4 causing an increase of ----- with a ---- efficiency73
9792807440botom trawlingruins benthic floor (worst)74
9792825436purse seeningschools of fish (2nd worst)75
9792828563drift netbouys/ TED (2rd worst)76
9792832419long linebait (best)77
979283487925percent by-catch78
9792838153NH3 and diseasethere is an abundance of ----- from waste and ---- from space in aquacultures79
9792850428contouring terracing polyculture NO TILL IMP and BMPsustainable agriculture practices for erosion80
9792857306predatorsin natural ecosystems, 50-90% of pest species are kept under control by81
9792867888DDT aldrin chlordanemajor CFC in fertz82
9792870991organophosphatemalathion organic phosphorus compound used as an insecticide83
9792870992atrazineweeds and herbacies84
9793024111biomag/acc carcinoge, bald eagle eggscons of DDT and source85
9793031350endocrine disruptor herm frogs and estrogen imbalancecons of atrazine86
97930364101950: developed 1960: developinggreen revolution differences87
9793040493embryoteratogen88
9793048615LD50dose that kills 50% of population89
9793061708coal gas, paint batteriessources of the following heavy metals: Hg Pb Cadnum90
9793070717furansgarbage that biomag/acc91
9793075828non-livingviruses are92
9793075829influenzathe number one death in the93
9793083158TBdisease from air travel and high pop density94
9793086834protozoanmalaria is ------ and comes from the anophalles in tropica areas95
9793131986poverty (lower air and water qual) sanitation urbinizationfactors that increase the spread of disease96
9793140436chlorea/typhoid, schiosoomaysis, giardiawater bourne disease examples97
9793145193local vs globaleipdemic vs pandemic98
9793147697together, trench/subduction yes but cant feel yesconvergent movement earthquake volcano99
9793165931away, ridges rifts, seafloor spread no yesdivergent movement earthquake volcano100
9793169512lateral sliding yes notransform movement earthquake volcano101
9793175113CH4fracking biggest con is the release of102
9793179128overburdenexcess milerals from mining103
9793191545smeltingThe process by which ore is melted to separate the useful metal from other elements.104
9793194123ganguewaste rock that must be removed before a mineral can be used105
9793194138tailingspiles of gangue, which is the waste material that results from mining.106
9793196707decreasedopen pit mining results in ---- mining107
9793199160coal seamsstrip mining leads to108
9793201323high grade oremnt top removal results in109
9793215479sandstone--->quartzite shale------>slate limestone----> marblesed into metamorphic rocks110
9793217896pumics basalt graniteigneous rocks111
9793224075peat lignite bitumous sub-bit ANTHROCITEtypes of coal112
9793224076efficiencybest solution to energy shortage113
9793228177tar sandsalberta, bitumen, habitat d, keystone114
9793241850electro-stat (filter) wet scrubbing (soak limestone to remove SO2) physical (gas/liquid)ways to "clean" coal115
9793241851SO2, increasingwetscribbing gets rid of ----- and end sup ----- pH116
9793256181nois LNG effictive117
9793262750crack shale w fracking fluid (lots of chemicals) releasing gasfracking process118
9793277375fuel (heat) control rod(absorb energy) moderator (slow neutron)major parts of a nuclear reactor119
9793287256neutronsnuclear fission splits atoms using excess120
9793290099not usednuclear fusion is121
97932975253-mile islandnuclear eplosion w no onsequences122
9793300245fukashimaearthquake in japan caused nuclear explosion123
9793302737lownuclear energy has a --- efficiency because of the thermal pollution124
97933067111%percentage of sunlight used for photosynthesis125
9793310028damscontrol flooding downstream, yangzee river, low fish sex and increased CH4126
9793323414mass: garbage gas: ethanol, CH4types of bioenergy127
9793323415bioenergyonly non-location dependent alternative energy128
9793326815H2Swhat is released from geothermal energy129
9793332076windowspassive solar energy130
9793336265PV panel, power tower, silicone e-active solar power131
9793336266cogenerationreuse of heat or energy132
979334991797% salt 3% fresh 69% ice 30% ground 1% accessible 87% lakes 11 swamps 2 riverswater % breakdown133
9793359540decreased increasedsalt water intrusion comes from --- solvent and ---- solute134
9793365376waterlogginghow to fix salty soil135
9793382018drip center timingefficiency rankings of irrigation136
9793387286inverseoxygen sags and BOD have an ---- relationship because137
9793402433fert runoff algal bloom black sun everything dies (plants and algal) aerobic decomposeseutrophication steps138
9793402434hypoxialow DO139
9793404360anoxiano DO140
9793413803septic tanks, lagons, leachatesground water pollution sources141
9793424297bar screen biological (bacteria and Cl-) wetland/reverse osmosissewage treatment steps142
9793432097turbidityFe equals143
9793432098decrease pHH2SO4 equals144
9793442161DO temp NPK bacteria turbwater quality identificators145
9793447049minimata bayHg poison from acid rain146
9793458535coagulant floculation settle waste OR charcol filter, Cl-F-safe drinking water steps147
9793461152aral seasstans148
9793463590chesapeak baydead zone case study149
9793465911ogally aquiferTX, KS, overirrigation150
9793474469hothigh pressure system151
9793474470coldlow pressure system152
9793477004hurricanewarm over cold causing a storm153
9793501509east (0-30) west (30-60) trade (60-90) west eastwind zones154
9793505486el ninoA periodic change in the pattern of ocean currents and water temperature in the mid-pacific region155
9793508151temperature inversionswhen a layer of warm air is on top of a layer of cooler air, preventing the air from mixing156
9793519115primary air pollutantsproduced directly by humans & nature (CO,CO2,SOx,NOx, hydrocarbons, particulates)157
9793522751particulate mattera mixture of dust, acids, and other chemicals that can be hazardous to human health158
9793525801nitrogen oxidescome from transportation coal causes smog acid rain and GHG159
9793531931sulfur oxidecome from transportation and coal athsma acid rain160
9793537870carbon oxidescoal and transporation CO=hemoglobin GHG fossil fuels161
9793546807ozonestratospheric=:) degrades UV radiation162
9793559547SPM radon CO formaldahyde asbestosindoor air pollutants163
9793575225NOx+VOC+O2{sunlight} O3 +PANsphoto chemical smog164
9793587505CCN + SOx, COx, NOx fert/cars volcano fossil fuelsources of acid rain165
9793592081thermal expansion desertification salt introusion diseaseeffects of global warming166
9793613097CFC and halocarbonswhat causes O3 depleation167
9793616932aging burning cancerUV a b c168
9793619697Awhat type of UV reaches earths surfce169
9793625191leachates CH4 and runoffsanitary landfill issues170
97936274175 R'sbest wat to solve waste problem171
9793627418PAPERmost municipal waste is172
9793629675conservtionregulating nat cap173
9793634152preservtioneliminating nat cap174
9793641332surface mining and control actrequires coal strip mines to reclaim the land175
9793645058madrid protocolsuspension on mineral exploration for 50 years in antartica176
9793652040safe drinking water actset maximum contaminant levels for pollutans that may have adverse affects on humans177
9793657063clean water actset amximum contaminant levels for pollutants that can be discharged into waterways aim to make surface waters swimable and fishable178
9793663153water quality actattempt to reduce non-point source pollution179
9793673807ocean dumping actbans oceans dumping of sewage sludge and industrial waste in the ocean180
9793676301clean air actset emmision standards for cars and limits release of air pollutants (189)181
9793686291kyoto protocolcontrolling global warming by setting greenhouse gas emission targets for developed countries182
9793693624montreal protocolphase out of ozone depleting substances183
9793702560resource conservation and reclamation actcontrols hazardous waste w cradle to grave system184
9793711314comprehensive environmental response compensation an liability actsuperfund designed to idenfity and clean up abandoned hazardous waste dump sites185
9793719092low level radioactive policyall states must have facilities to handlw low level radioactive wastes186
9793724390nuclear waste policy actUS govt must develop a high level uclear waste site by 2015187
9793728925endangered species acta 1973 U.S. act designed to protect species from extinction188
9793735630convention on international trade in endangered specieslists species that cant be commercially traded as live specimens or products189
9793743873food quality protection actsets pesticide limit in food and all active and inactive ingredients must be screened for estrogen/endocrine effects190
9793760943national environmental policy actenvironmental impact statements that must be done before any project affecting federal lands can be started191
9793766291FIFRAcontrol over pestacide use and ban of DDT192
9793769548rachel carsonzoology and marine biology write silent springs and DDT ban193
9793773656john muirsierra club, inspired FDR conservation program and create national parks194
9793780107julia butterflyspent two years in a redwood tree195
9793786514david suzukigeneticist from canada does TV shows and over 32 environmental books196
9793789753garret hardintradegy of the commons197
9793792580paul erhlichbiologist published pop bomb198
9793794848eo wilsonisland biogeograohy and biodiversity199
9793802383roland and molinachemists who suggested ozone depletion due to CFCs200
9793805082wangari maathiagreen belt movement planting trees in kenya201
9793810780Natural CapitalThe natural resources of Earth, such as air, water, and minerals.202
9793812973DegradationA decline to a lower condition, quality, or level203
9793815049Remediationreturn a contaminated area to its original state204
9793815050FiniteHaving limits205
9793840495all threeCarbon is found in 1-shale 2-limestone 3-nat gas206
979386160235efficiency of nuclear power plant207
979386468760natural gas power plant efficiency208
979386768210gas in car efficiency209
9793880350reclamationThe process of restoring and improving land disturbed by coal mining can be defined as210
9793895778shellsSulfur is found in all of the following except A) shells B) ocean deposits C) volcanic eruptions D) atmosphere E) underground rocks211
9793918700remove, remove, replenishTerrestrial producers _____ CO2 from the atmosphee, aquatic producers _____ CO2 from the water, and consumers _____ CO2 from the atmosphere.212
9793925686O2Which of the following gases was NOT present during the Earth's earliest atmosphere?213
979393134799What percent of all species that ever existed do biologists estimate are now extinct?214
979393134865The Middle East contains about ____ of the world's oil reserves215
9793936464three onlyPhosphorus exists in the atmosphere as a I. Gas II. Sulfate III. Fine dust216
9793940415crystallization of magmaGranite is formed through A)crystallization of magma B) compression of precipitates C) compression of metamorphic rock D) heating of sedimentary rock E) chemical alteration of sediment217
979394623580percentage of non-developed countries218
9793980195algae multiplied and decoposedwhy does the DO after one week decrease as the amount of waste increases when organic material is added into a tank219
9793997086carbon that has been stored underground is added into the carbon cyclehow does the burning of fossil fuels increase the net in atmospheric carbon220
9794001803phosphrouswhich element is most likely to milit primary production in freshwater lakes221
9794010922troposphere absorbs outgoing IRglobal climate change occurs because increasing concentrations of GHG in222
9794020103boiling pointoil refineries separate based on223
9794028694CERCLAdeals witht eh cleanup of abondoned hazardous waste sites224
9794033222cyanideseperation and extraction of gold in remote regions often results in environmental contamination with what225
9794043258SO2the clean air act established a cap-and-trade program for ----226
9794065020notsewage treatment plants in the US (are/ are not) equipped227
9807743540desanilizationmiddle east228
9807743542desertifictionaustralia229
9807747179methanepoles/ and icy areas release230
9807761364H2O CO2 CH4 N2O O3 CFCGHG in order of abundance231
9807763709CH4agriculture contributes to what GHG232
9807768619nodo humans contribute to water cycle233
9807771486commensalismlichen on bark234
9807796133commensalismspanish moss235
9807796319commensalismremora and shark236
9807801545paratacismland prey and shark237
9807812691paratacismworm and fungus or insect238
9807820677littoralwhat lake zone has the most biodiversity239
9807823730styrenecarpets and kidney issues240
9807832176mitigationto make better241
9807832177lowinternal combustion has ---- efficiency242
9807838159fuel cellbest hydrologic alternative energy243
9807843059hoover damlake mead is to what dam244
9807847302Panseye irritants245
9807878650easter Island Effectdeforestation leads to evaporation which leads to desertification and erosion246
9807886060yesdoes noise pollution affect an ecosystem247
9807891278lowhead island effect occurs because of --- aldebo in cities248
9807898410estra O3CFCs bond with ----- ----- at polar regions249
9807920934shale basinfracturing in --- ----250
9807923524sizementearthquake movement251
9807926562electrostatic precipcatalytic converter is the equivalent of -------- ------ for cars252
9807934302ozinationbest way to clean water253
9807937524idland biogeographysmaller and close mean more biodiversity254
9808115864lateritea red, highly leached soil type found in the tropics that is rich in oxides of iron and aluminum255
9808119101pedocalA soil formed in arid and semiarid climates characterized by an accumulation of calcium carbonate.256
98691466931.5 Billionchina population257
98691541821.4 billionindia population258
9869156460325 milUS population259
9872575934multiple/ divide coefficients add/subtract exponentshow to multiple and divide exponents260
9872595146if the same exponents: add or subtract coefficients and add on exponent If not the same exponent: alter coefficient so same exponent by moving the decimal add or subtract coefficientsadding and subtracting exponents261
9872598455-9nano is262
987259845612giga is263
98726015049terra is264
98726015056mega is265
987262219270/% growthdoubling time formula266
9872629123Kw times timea kilowatt hour is equal to267
9872633818wattequal to amps times volts OR joules/ seconds268
9872639959logarithmaticthe pH scale is269
9872653636half the start amount and add half life half the new amount and add half lifehow to half life270
9872667464square the number and unitarea conversion271
9872669817cube the number and unitvolume conversion272
9872673073crude birth ratenumber of births per 1000 women per year273
9872706121per personper capitia means274
9902851513topif asked for the total on a line graph, go--- (??)275
9902852756keywhat should you not forget on line graphs w multiple lines276
9902856278all multiplication then all divisiondimensional analysis steps277
9902860900DIVIDEif states that the machine does no have 100% efficiency,278
9902862124100percent increase is multiplied by279
9902864247rangewhat type of answers given on bar graph280
99058551531.3global growth rate281

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